SPRINGFIELD – The $105 billion Surface Transportation Extension Act of 2012 signed into law Friday by President Barack Obama will fund seven local projects to begin over the next two years, according to Lt. Gov. Timothy P. Murray’s office.

Timothy W. Brennan, executive director of the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission, said Friday that the Massachusetts legislature has not passed a transportation bond required to pay the local match of 20 percent and get all the projects moving. The local match was severed from a transportation bond for local road projects, called Chapter 90, that passed in Boston last week.

“So that is a huge priority for us,” Brennan said. “We are all pushing very hard.”

Cyndi Roy, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Transportation, said she expects the bond to pass sometime this month.

Brennan said some projects on this list have been on drawing boards for more than a decade.

“We have lots of bridges that need work. We have intersections that are deficient and we have pavement that is crumbling.”

The Pioneer Valley Planning Commission estimates at the entire Pioneer Valley has a backlog of needed but undone transportation projects of more than $1 billion, Brennan said.